When Your Selling Price is too High, Beware!
Meeting With Realtors
So you’ve decided to sell your home and have a fairly good
idea of what you think it is worth. Being a sensible home
seller, you schedule appointments with three local listing
agents who’ve been hanging stuff on your front doorknob
for years. Each Realtor comes prepared with a "Competitive
Market Analysis" on fancy paper and they each recommend
a specific sales price.
Amazingly, a couple of the Realtors have come up with prices
that are lower than you expected. Although they back up
their recommendations with recent sales data of similar
homes, you remain convinced your house is worth more.
When you interview the third agent’s figures, they are
much more in line with your own anticipated value, or maybe
even higher. Suddenly, you are a happy and excited home
seller, already counting the money.
A Sales Practice Called "Buying a Listing"
If you’re like many people, you pick Realtor number three.
This is an agent who seems willing to listen to your input
and work with you. This is an agent that cares about putting
the most money in your pocket. This is an agent that is
willing to start out at your price and if you need to drop
the price later, you can do that easily, right?
After all, everyone else does it!
The truth is that you may have just met an agent engaging
in a questionable sales practice called "buying a listing."
He "bought" the listing by suggesting you might
be able to get a higher sales price than the other agents
recommended. Most likely, he is quite doubtful that your
home will actually sell at that price. The intention from
the beginning is to eventually talk you into lowering the
price.
Why do some agents "buy" listings this way?
There are basically two reasons. A well-meaning and hard
working agent can feel pressure from a homeowner who has
an inflated perception of his home’s value. On the other
hand, there are some agents who engage in this sales practice
routinely.
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copyright 2000 by Terry Light and RealEstate
ABC, revised 2002